SOME BELIEVE THAT THIS HISTORIC COLLEGE
MAY BE ONE OF THE MOST HAUNTED SCHOOLS IN THE MIDWEST. WHAT DO YOU THINK?

Illinois College was
founded in 1829 by Reverend John M. Ellis, a Presbyterian minister who
felt a "seminary of learning" was needed in the new frontier
state of Illinois. His plans came to the attention of a group of
Congregational students at Yale University. Seven of them, in one of the
now famous "Yale Bands", came westward to help establish the
College. It became one of the first institutes for higher learning in
Illinois and the first two men to graduate from a college in state were
Richard Yates, who became the Civil War governor of Illinois and later a
U.S. Senator and Jonathan Edward Spilman. This second graduate composed
the now-familiar music to Robert Burns's immortal poem, "Flow
Gently, Sweet Afton". Both men received their baccalaureate degree
from Illinois College in 1835.

Sturtevant Hall at
Illinois College

Nine students met for the first class on January 4, 1830. Julian
Sturtevant, the first instructor and the second president, reported, "We
had come there that morning to open a fountain for future generations to drink
at." Shortly after, Edward Beecher left the Park Street Church in Boston,
Massachusetts, to serve the new college as it first president. He created a
strong college and retained close intellectual ties with New England. His
brother, Henry Ward Beecher, preached and lectured at Illinois College, and
his sister, Harriet Beecher Stowe, was an occasional visitor. His brother,
Thomas, was graduated from Illinois College in 1843. Ralph Waldo Emerson, Mark
Twain, Horace Greeley, and Wendell Phillips were among the visitors and
lecturers in the early years.

In 1843 and 1845 two of the College's seven literary societies were formed.
Possibly unique in the Midwest today, the societies have continued in their
roles as centers for debate and criticism. Abraham Lincoln was one of many
speakers appearing on the campus under the sponsorship of a literary society.

Illinois College also became heavily involved with the abolitionist movement
as President Beecher took a very active role. At one point, a group of
students was indicted by a grand jury for harboring runaway slaves. Illinois
College was also a well-known station on the Underground Railroad and a number
of tunnels can still be found under the college, leading to the Smith and
Fayerweather houses on the campus.

In the years following the Civil War graduates contributed with distinction to
the national scene. Among these was William Jennings Bryan, '81, who within 15
years was the Democratic candidate for the U.S. presidency in the race with
McKinley. He continued with a prominent role in politics even after the
election.

There were many other famous and prominent graduates of the school over the
years and it has maintained an outstanding scholarly program.

Not surprisingly, it has maintained close ties to the supernatural world as
well. Like with many other historic spots in Illinois, the events of the past
have certainly left their mark on Illinois College. Many of these events still
come back to “haunt” students and faculty members today and there are many
who have encountered this ghosts of yesterday face-to face.

Beecher Hall

One place where
strange events have been reported is in Beecher Hall, which was
built in 1829. This two-level building is now used as a meeting hall for
two of the school’s Literary Societies, Sigma Pi and Phi Alpha. The Sig's meet on the upper floor and the Phi's meet in the lower part
of the building. The majority of the encounters here seem to involve the
groups who frequent the upper floor. The most commonly reported events are
ghostly footsteps that can be distinctly heard in one room, always coming
from another. If the witness follows the sound, then the footsteps will
suddenly be heard in the other room instead. Years ago, this was a medical
building and cadavers were stored on the upper floor. Some believe that
this may explain the ghostly activity.

Legend on campus has it that the students here were not
actually supposed to have the cadavers that were secreted away in the
building. However, they were so dedicated to collecting medical knowledge that
they stole them from local hospitals and cemeteries, introducing the art of
"body snatching to Illinois College. The corpses were hidden in the attic
until the stench of decaying flesh alerted college officials to their
presence.

Other legends claim that the ghost here is that of Williams Jenning Bryan,
who has returned to haunt his old school. He was a member of Sigma Pi and was
often in the building during his years at Illinois College. There are others
who say that it might be Abraham Lincoln’s ghost instead. He was an honorary
Phi Alpha and while he did not attend the school, he did speak at Beecher Hall
on occasion. In addition, William Berry (Lincoln’s partner at new Salem),
William H. Herndon (his law partner), and Ann Rutledge's brother, David, all
attended Illinois College.

Another allegedly
haunted spot on campus is the David A. Smith House, which was
built in 1854. Today, the structure is home to three of the women’s
Literary Societies, the Gamma Deltas, the Chi Betas and the women of
Sigma Phi Epsilon. There is a parlor for all of them but the Delts use a
room on the main floor while the Betas and the Sig Phip’s have rooms on
the second floor. The attic is used by all of the groups but there is
also a dining room, a kitchen and an apartment at the back of the house.

The Smith House

There are several versions of the historic legend
concerning the ghost in this house, but all of them claim that she is the
daughter of the original owner and that her name was Effie Smith. Basically,
Effie was being courted by a young man from town and they became engaged.
When he proposed to her, he gave her a diamond ring and she was said to have
scratched it against her bedroom window to see if the diamond was real. When
she realized that it was, she etched her signature into the glass and her
name remained for many years afterward. The window has recently been removed
and this small and unusual piece of history has been lost.

Then, the story begins to take different paths. In one version of the story,
David Smith was very disapproving of his daughter’s new fiancée and he
literally locked Effie into a closet one day when the man came calling.
Fearful of her father’s wrath, the young man hid himself in a small room
that was only accessible from the attic. For some reason, he nailed himself in
to escape from David Smith and he later died there. According to students who
have been in the attic, the nails are still visible there today, nailed from
the other side of the door! When Effie learned of her lover’s cruel fate,
she threw herself from an upstairs window and died in the fall.

In the second version of the story, Effie’s young man went off to fight in
the Civil War. Every day, Effie climbed up to the attic and watched for him to
return. When she later learned that he had been killed in battle, committed
suicide by once again, jumping out of the window.

Another variation of the legend has Effie being jilted by her lover and she
again commits suicide. Regardless of what happened, the story stands that she
killed herself and has since returned to haunt the house.

Effie’s rocking chair is still located in the attic and the stories say that
if you move the chair away from the window (where it sits, facing out), leave
the attic and then return later, the chair will have returned to its original
position. This window is located in a storage area for the Chi Beta society
and every year, they frequently test the chair and discover that the story is
true! One young woman even walked into the room one day and the door suddenly
slammed closed behind her. It is also not uncommon for cold air to suddenly
fill this room, even though for years, the windows were painted shut. It was
said that ice cold wind would often come from the window with Effie’s name
etched on the glass.

Another interesting feature of this building is the tunnel that once exited
from the dirt basement. This tunnel was once supposed to have connected to
other buildings on campus and was said to have been used during the years of
the Underground Railroad. As operations connected with this abolitionist
system were always kept secret, and no records exist, no one knows for sure if
the stories are true. Today, the tunnel is boarded up and remains only a
curiosity of times gone by.

Whipple Hall

Another reportedly
ghostly location is Whipple Hall, which was constructed in 1882.
The spectral occupant of this place is known only as the “Gray Ghost”.
The upper part of the building serves as a meeting hall for the Alpha Phi
Omega society, for the Eta Sigma chapter, which is a national service
fraternity, and as the location of the security office. The lower part of
Whipple is the meeting hall of the Pi Pi Rho Literary Society. The
basement of the building is only accessible from the outside and is
divided in half. One side of it was once a classroom when this was Whipple
Academy, a college prep school. Strangely out of place chalkboards still
remain on the walls.

Perhaps the most famous sighting on campus of the “Gray Ghost” occurred
to a girl who was leaving a Pi Pi Rho party one night and had to retrieve
something from the Alpha Phi Omega hall. She had been drinking (but later
insisted that she was not drunk) before she started climbing the curved
staircase. As she reached the middle of the curve of the stairs, she looked up
to the top landing and saw a man standing there. He was all dressed in gray
and she quickly realized that he was not a security officer. As she peered a
little closer into the shadows, she also realized something else... that he
had no face! She began screaming and ran back down the staircase and out of
the building. Due to the noise of the party, no one heard her though and the
revelers wouldn’t learn of the strange experience until later.

A room that is located on the third floor of Illinois College’s Ellis
Hall is also rumored to be infested with ghosts. According to reports, no
one lives there is they don’t have to. Rumor has it that a girl hanged
herself in the closet there around 1986 after not getting a bid from a
Literary Society. It is said that doors open and close on there own here,
appliances and radios turn on and off and that windows have a habit of going
up and down under their own power. Or at least that's one version of the
story....

Other students and alumni of Illinois College have
contacted me to say that the girl who haunts room 303 was actually a young
woman named "Gail", who died of natural causes in this room. Apparently, her
parents were aware that she was terminally ill when she went to school but as
attending college had always been her dream, they allowed her to go anyway.
She died while living in Ellis Hall and a small plaque is mounted on the door
of the room in her memory. It is said that her ghost is a mischievous one,
opening doors and hiding things. Local legend has it that third floor
residents have often said that if they lose anything, they will ask Gail aloud
to return it. The missing item is usually found a short time later.

A former student of the college, who lived for two years in
Ellis Hall, wrote to tell me of experiences that she had while living below
the "haunted room". She said that she often heard knocking sounds coming from
the other side of the wall, even though there was nothing there. It was the
outer wall of the building and there were no trees nearby.

There are other places
too, but stories from some of these sites are much more sketchy. One of
them is Fayerweather House, a residence hall for women. It has
been said that windows and doors operate on their own here and that
lights turn on and off without explanation. Perhaps most strange are the
stories of “grave-shaped” depressions that sometimes appear in the
dirt floor of the basement. Some have suggested that perhaps the
building may have been constructed over a burial ground, but no one
really knows for sure.

Fayerweather House

I have been informed that the girl who allegedly hanged
herself in the closet once resided in this house. In fact, she committed
suicide in the closet of Room #5, which is located on the stairway landing
between the first and second floors of the house. "Susie", as she has been
called, is noisy and can often be heard walking around the house, opening
doors in the middle of the night and scratching on walls. One correspondent
informed me that Susie was once blamed for the violent removal of a clothing
rod from the wall. They could never explain how this had happened.

The stories also maintain that the attic of the
Fayerweather house has been fully converted into dorm rooms, but they are
never used. It has been said that the rooms were closed when too many strange
things started to happening to the students who lived there. One of my
correspondents had a sister who lived in Fayerweather and told her of doors
slamming and lights turning on and off, as well as objects that would fly
about in the rooms.

Another site is Sturtevant Hall, one of the most famous spots on
campus. Recent stories say that a ghostly young man in a Civil War era uniform
is sometimes seen here. In addition, it is nearly impossible to find someone
who will spend the night in the north tower of the building. It has been said
that there are too many sounds and noises here to get anyone to do so. Before
it was made into classrooms, the building housed the Pi Pi Rho Literary
Society. Members of the society still maintain that toilets in the hall often
flushed by themselves.

Crampton Hall, which was built in 1873, is also
believed to be home to a ghost. The residence was built to house 69 men and it
was named in honor of Rufus C. Crampton, a former professor and president of
the college. According to the story, there was a male student who left a party
one night and was later found in his room (again) having hanged himself in the
closet. However, it was always said that he was found hanging in such a way
that he could not have done it himself! His former room is now believed to be
haunted.

And apparently closets in Crampton Hall are as mysterious
as the stories that revolve around them. One student told me that one day
three of the residents were waiting on a fourth friend to get ready so that
they could all go somewhere together. Finally, they tired of waiting and went
to check on him, only to find that he was hanging upside in the closet, stark
naked, and so frightened that he was almost incoherent. The student went on to
say that he lived in this building for one semester and "would never live
there again". One night, he fell asleep with his lights on but was awakened by
a noise. When he looked up, he saw a man standing there looking at him. The
man quickly turned and vanished into the closet.

Another resident haunt can be found in the McGaw
building. This is a performing arts building and it has been reported that you
will never find anyone alone in the auditorium alone here at night. The place
is allegedly haunted by the ghost of a man who is seen wearing clothing from
the 1940's. He is usually seen out of the corners of the eyes of those who are
on stage.

Rammelkamp Chapel allegedly has a haunted basement as well. Some of the
students tell stories of classroom doors and that open and then slam shut,
sometimes in the middle of lectures. The classrooms are located on both sides
of a long hall here and by looking out the door of one of them, a person can
see into the classroom across the hall. One day, during a class, a student
reported became quite upset when she looked across the hall and spotted a
woman in white in the adjoining classroom. This would not have been so strange
had the woman not vanished before her eyes!